Have you ever wondered what these are? They count pedestrians around an intersection. Usually found in busy areas like stadiums and stations.

The intention here is to flag to the traffic controller that there is overcrowding and preempt a pedestrian crossing cycle asap. It's a safety feature aiming to ensure people don't get pushed onto the road.

Many of these run a wireless AP for configuration.

@xssfox
> Many of these run a wireless AP for configuration.

shenanigans ensued

@xssfox I'd reprogram it to also trigger on ravens.
@whyrl @xssfox https://hom.ph/@kieran/115222885931125806 my favorite pedestrian infrastructure use!
kieran (@[email protected])

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Whyrl (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image @[email protected] I fixed it #tfeveryday

Furry.Engineer - Duct tape, hotfixes, and poor soldering!

@xssfox I'm told that some AU councils use Bluetooth MACs as a proxy for people and vehicles.

Presumably bluetooth readers that merely need to detect a device are both simple and reliable while providing sufficient coverage for the purposes of detecting congestion or speed changes of a flow.

@markd I'm not sure if it's still used but yes on the motor way they would time Mac addresses between checkpoints to estimate travel time and congestion
@xssfox I like it. It's a neat and simple (and presumably relatively cheap) solution without needing the complexity of vehicle or human recognition.
@markd @xssfox this works surprisingly well and basic dev boards are cheap as
https://github.com/cyberman54/ESP32-Paxcounter
GitHub - cyberman54/ESP32-Paxcounter: Wifi & BLE driven passenger flow metering with cheap ESP32 boards

Wifi & BLE driven passenger flow metering with cheap ESP32 boards - cyberman54/ESP32-Paxcounter

GitHub
@xssfox Also sometimes used near senior citizen facilities to lengthen pedestrian cycles if there is someone moving slowly.
@xssfox thanks, crossing safety supervisor fox!